Democratic presidential candidates issued statements and tweets on the third anniversary of the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, Florida — but few of them mentioned that it was a radical Islamic terror attack.

The jihadist behind the Orlando, FL massacre in June, in newly released 911 transcripts, alludes to the the Muslim holy month of Ramadan this year after he opened fired inside a gay club, killing 49 people and wounding another 53, saying “I fasted the whole day and I prayed.”

A Florida Imam with close ties to Omar Mateen, the Islamic terrorist who killed 50 people at an Orlando gay nightclub, says Sharia Law is not only “the best law,” but claims it is “already in the Constitution.”

Terrorist Omar Mateen, 29, received a traditional Islamic burial this week in a Sunni Muslim cemetery located more than three hours south of Pulse, the gay Orlando nightclub where he took the lives of 49 innocent people.

“US Attorney General Loretta Lynch said during a press conference yesterday that our most effective weapon against terrorism is ‘love,’” Rep. Jeff Duncan (R-SC) wrote on Facebook Wednesday morning. “All you need is love” may be a great Beatles song, but it’s a terrible foreign policy.”

The stage was set for the types of attacks we saw in Orlando a long time before the Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL) showed up. Gays, just like Jews, are commonly scapegoated as vile, sin-bearing creatures whose mere presence decays societies.

Monday on Fox News Channel’s “Special Report,” Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer weighed in the Obama administration’s handling of the aftermath of last week’s terrorist mass shooting in Orlando, FL. Krauthammer criticized the White House for going out of the

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) said Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation” that the Orlando shooting was not a “gun control issue,” but more of a “national security issue. Partial transcript as follows: “We have worked with the Justice Department in drafting this legislation

The New York Times’ sloppiness when reporting on Christianity is proverbial, but perhaps none of its prior errors equals its claim this week that the apostle Saint Paul commanded Christians to kill the homosexuals among them.

Saturday on Fox News Channel’s “Justice,” host Judge Jeanine Pirro reacted to the FBI’s closed investigation of Orlando shooter Omar Mateen despite strong evidence he was a threat, saying the government is in no “position to help.” “Our government is simply not doing

Saturday on MSNBC, host Alex Witt asked Rep. Jim Himes (D-CT) if he believes the gun proposals that will be voted on Monday by Congress would have stopped last week’s Orlando shooting. Himes responded by saying that question is not

CNN journalist and gay activist Anderson Cooper said that a person like Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi is a “hypocrite” for opposing gay marriage while simultaneously denouncing the slaughter of 49 people at a gay nightclub in Orlando.

ESPN told its hosts not to wade into political controversies. Then host Jemele Hill lectured America on lecturing Muslims on anti-gay bigotry in the wake of the mass-shooting by an ISIS supporter at a gay nightclub in Orlando.

Wednesday on CNN’s “New Day,” Rep. Steve King (R-IA) discussed how to handle the terrorism threat in the wake last weekend’s terrorist shooting in Orlando, FL. King warned that political correctness is suppressing signs that could alert the authorities to

Tuesday on Fox News Channel’s “Hannity,” former Department of Homeland Security official Philip Haney insisted terrorism in Orlando, FL and San Bernardino, CA might have been prevented had the his former agency not deleted a list he compiled linking some

White House press secretary Josh Earnest confirmed reports that President Barack Obama hasn’t called Republican governor of Florida Rick Scott after the terrorist attack at a gay club in Orlando, Florida on Sunday.

SANTA MONICA — James Wesley Howell, the 20-year-old Indiana man arrested early Sunday with a car full of guns and potential explosives, told police he was on the way to the Los Angeles Gay Pride parade. And he may have been: he was gay.

As the news continues to emerge about the brutal radical Islamist terror attack responsible for slaying 49 people at an Orlando, Florida, nightclub, Chick-fil-A–a company often maligned by the LGBT community–has made a selfless gesture to comfort supporters of the victims of the terrorist act without seeking any publicity for it.

On the debut broadcast of Fox Sports 1’s “Speak for Yourself” on Monday, co-host Jason Whitlock reacted to this weekend’s mass shooting at an Orlando, FL gay nightclub. Whitlock said the sports world needs a “prominent” role model like Muhammad

Singer Madonna is being blasted on social media for the way she chose to mourn the victims in the deadly terror attack at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, which resulted in 49 people being murdered and another 53 injured by a Muslim man who reportedly declared loyalty to the Islamic State.

Speaking to Fox News Channel’s Maria Bartiromo Sunday, Dr. Sebastian Gorka demanded authorities cease the use of euphemisms like “tragedy” and “hate crime” to describe incidents like the jihadist slaughter of 50 people at Pulse, an LGBT nightclub in Orlando, Florida Sunday morning.

Monday in an interview that aired on Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends,” Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) said it was time for Congress to declared on war on ISIS in the wake of the Orlando shooting that resulted in the

In a long list of who is responsible for the horrific slaughter at the Pulse nightclub on Saturday, the Huffington Post blames everyone imaginable—from Ted Cruz to Pope Francis—except the real culprit: radical Islam. “I blame Ted Cruz, Pat McCrory,

In a recent statement on Sunday’s massacre of 50 people at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando (FL), Chicago Archbishop Blase J. Cupich avoids mentioning the ideology of radical Islam behind the shooting and points the finger instead to “easy access”